Mexico has one of the world's highest femicide rates,[1] [2] with as many as 3% of murder victims being classified as femicides. In 2021, approximately 1,000 femicides took place, out of 34,000 total murder victims.[3] Ciudad Juárez, in Chihuahua, has one of the highest rates of femicide within the country.
Mexico is also among the leading country in term of murders, and 90% of the victims of murder are men. This escalation of violence began in the early 1990s and was followed by a wave of sexual violence and torture, abductions, increasing rates of women being murdered because of their gender.[4] While the number of women murdered in Mexico has grown substantially in recent years, the proportion of female victims of homicide has not actually changed much over the last few decades. According to INEGI (Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Geografía), the ratio of homicides targeting women hovered between 10-13% from 1990 to 2020.
Up to one third of female murder victims in Mexico are murdered by their current or ex partners. This violence has been attributed to the backlash theory, which alleges that as a marginalized group gains more rights within their society, there is a violent backlash from their oppressors. The response from the Mexican government has been relatively minimal; there is very little legislation protecting women.[5] This lack of response further discourages individuals or groups from speaking out about or challenging this phenomenon. Local police and government officials are known to dismiss instances of women going missing, and in some cases have been found to be in connection with various instances of violence against women. There have been many small feminist movements which have attempted to bring attention to the level of violence that Mexican women face.[6] These movements primarily focus their efforts on demonstrations, sharing their own experiences, and creating works of art to express their frustrations.
Mexico officially began documenting the amount of femicides in 2012.[7] In 2021, roughly 3% of murder victims (~1,000 out of 34,000 total) were classed as femicides. On average, ten girls or women and 100 boys and men are killed daily in Mexico; it is estimated three femicides take place each day. The high murder rate in the country has continued to make international news, while directing attention to the abilities of Mexican authorities to deter crime and violence.
2020 saw an increase in femicides; in the first seven months of 2020, reports suggested 2,000 femicides had occurred. Mexico is considered one of the countries with more femicides in Latin America and the world, among the most dangerous states is the State of Mexico, especially for one of its municipalities: Ecatepec, since in this state 84 murders were reported in the first months of the year.[8]
'Ingrid Escamilla
One case that drew controversy in 2020 was that of Ingrid Escamilla, a Mexican woman who was murdered by her partner in her apartment. Police leaked images of the crime scene to the press, which were published in various newspapers. In response, demonstrations were held in the Zócalo de la Ciudad de México, especially on February 14. The case led to the proposal of the Ingrid law, which criminalizes sharing images, audios, or videos of corpses or body parts, of the circumstances of death, injuries or state of health. Higher penalties are invoked If the content relates to women, girls, or adolescents, or if the content is leaked by a public servant.[9]
Debanhi Susana Escobar Bazaldúa, 18, disappeared after attending a party with friends in Monterrey, Nuevo León, Mexico on April 9, 2021. Her body was found 13 days later in a nearby motel cistern. The case generated great social commotion due to irregularities in the investigation and the lack of answers from the authorities.[10] [11] [12] [13] [14]
Lidia Gabriela
Lidia Gabriela Gomez, 35, was kidnapped by a cab driver in Mexico City, Mexico on November 19, 2022 and later found dead. The case generated outrage over the alleged complicity of the authorities, who failed to respond in time to the victim's distress calls.[15] [16]
Violence against women, that is, violence specifically against women and girls by men and boys on the basis of the victim's gender, is the result of misogyny and sexist discrimination. Feminist movements have been active in bringing attention to the problem of femicide, but the rates still continue to climb, especially among Indigenous women. One hypothesis posited for the rate of growth in femicides is that as Mexican women gained more autonomy within patriarchal society, men who hold misogynist beliefs respond violently in an effort to maintain their own social power.
While femicide and gender based violence are issues that impact all women, some factors put certain groups of women at higher risk of violence.[17] Low-income women and Indigenous women in particular are more likely to be victims of femicide than their wealthier peers. For Indigenous women, geography is a primary obstacle in violence, including femicide, as offices to report these instances are not located near Indigenous communities. This leads to under-reporting, making it more challenging to quantify the level of violence against these women.
Other roadblocks to quantifying the violence Mexican women experience is a general misunderstanding of what femicide is. Many people view femicide as simply murder, rather than a targeted attack on the basis of gender. This conflation of femicide with other kinds of violence erases the gendered aspect and motivations specific to femicide.
The rise of violence in Mexico has also seen a public softening towards the concept of feminism, especially among those fighting for justice for feticide victims. Mexican women began to take to the streets to march in large demonstrations. These marches called for the acknowledgement of the gender based violence women face. Mexican feminists created the term "feminicidio" (femicide) to describe the way some women are murdered because they are women. They urged their community members to recognize this kind of violence deviates from other kinds of murder and see it as a different issue. The main participants in this movement are the loved ones of those who have been victims of femicide. Their loved ones use various forms of media to spread the stories of those who lost their lives in the violence. Their efforts birthed many organizations that act to keep women in Mexico safe from violence as well as informed about it.
Social media and the
transformed the movement through changing the culture of shame and fear that came with coming forward about sexual violence. Women naming their abusers publicly became normalized as a result.
The response to the increase in violence from both the local police and Mexican government has been consistently inadequate. Police officers are known to downplay instances of women going missing. and to be slow to respond to reports of violence or missing people. These sluggish responses result in death as time is of the essence in disappearance cases. Additionally, actual investigations are often not conducted properly which compromises their integrity, ultimately making it more difficult for victims to get justice. Crime scenes do not get sealed, autopsies are mishandled, and victims are not identified. In the case of prosecution, people are tortured into giving false confessions to take accountability for more murders than they are responsible for. Falsification of evidence also contributes to innocent people being arrested. In many places in Mexico, police officers themselves have been found to be in connection with the murders. Furthermore, victims are frequently blamed for their deaths and families perspectives of their deceased loved ones are treated with skepticism.
Some have suggested that the Mexican government allows femicides and other kinds of gender based violence to occur because it makes women afraid, and may prevent feminist movements or further liberation for Mexican women. When women are more focused on fearing for their lives, activist circles are more difficult to sustain.
Activists in Mexico as well as other human rights organizations have criticized the Mexican government for its conduct and claimed these actions are human rights violations.
Following the disappearance of Mónica Citlalli Díaz in a suburb of Mexico City in November 2022, Supreme Court President Arturo Zaldívar enacted a national protocol to investigate all femicides, as well as other homicides targeted towards women. Efforts have been previously made by certain Mexican states to create prosecutor's offices specifically for gender-based crimes. Since 2015, the federal government has declared multiple gender violence alerts to urge local, state and federal authorities to take the necessary emergency action in particular regions, and to provide the public with vital security measures and justice for victims and affected communities.
NO. | Federal Entity | Date of publication | Typical figure | Bien jurídico tutelado | |
1. | AguascalientesArticle 97A | August 21, 2017amended on June 11, 2018. amended on DECEMBER 23, 2019. | Autonomous figure | Life | |
2. | Baja CaliforniaArticle 129 | April 5, 2013reformed on March 20, 2015. reformed March 24, 2021 | Baja California Autonomous figure | Life | |
3. | Baja California SurArticle 389 | Approved on November 29, 2013.Vetoed by the Governor of the State on January 28, 2014, voted by the Congress in February 2014 and published on November 30, 2014. | Homicide offender | No | |
4. | CampecheArticle 160 | July 20, 2012reformed on March 10, 2013. | Campeche Autonomous figure | Life | |
5. | ChiapasArticle 164 Bis | February 8, 2012. | Chiapas Autonomous figure | Life | |
6. | ChihuahuaArticle 126 Bis | September 14, 2017 | Self-governing figure | Life | |
7. | CoahuilaArticle 336 Bis 1 | October 24, 2012reformed on September 15, 2015. | Coahuila Article 336 Bis 1 | Life | |
8. | ColimaArticle 191 Bis 5 | August 27, 2011reformed on July 4, 2015. | Colima Autonomous figure | Life | |
9. | Mexico CityArticle 148 bis | July 26, 2011. | Autonomous figure | Life, bodily integrity, dignity and access to a life free of violence. |
The Women's Access Law defines femicide violence as: "The extreme form of gender violence against women, product of the violation of their human rights, in the public and private spheres, formed by the set of misogynist behaviors that can lead to social and State impunity and can culminate in homicide and other forms of violent death of women.
In cases of femicide, the penalties set forth in Article 325 of the Federal Criminal Code will be applied."
And it establishes the gender violence alert: "It is the set of emergency governmental actions to confront and eradicate feminicidal violence in a given territory, whether exercised by individuals or by the community itself." and has been considered as a defense mechanism.[18]
It is activated to alert people belonging to governmental bodies and the population in general about the urgency of stopping femicides, street, work, school or domestic harassment, discrimination and violence experienced by Mexican women, with the purpose of guaranteeing a good quality of life free of inequalities.[19]
The Alerta de Violencia de Género contra las Mujeres is a mechanism of the government of Mexico that aims to "confront and eradicate femicidal violence in a given territory". It encompasses various actions, including protocols for the investigation of femicides and programs aimed at feticide prevention, as well as "reforms to eliminate inequality in legislation and public policy".
The denunciation of femicide has been present since the early 2000s in the work of numerous artists. Activists and artists have gone hand in hand to denounce the murder of women points out the artist and feminist theorist Monica Mayer. The first exhibitions denouncing feminicide were carried out by Chicana artists in the United States in collaboration with Mexican artists, according to Mayer. In addition to exhibitions they carry out marches to Ciudad Juarez to denounce the situation. In 2000, Maritza Morillas paints "Paisaje cotidiano en Ciudad Juárez" and invited by Yan María Castro to participate in an exhibition against violence against women, she creates the series "CAroDAtaVERnibus" (2001) dedicated to the women murdered in Ciudad Juárez.[20]
In 2002, Claudia Bernal organized a performance in the Zócalo to denounce violence against women. Lorena Wolffer's work Mientras dormíamos: el caso Juárez,[21] Guatemalan Regina José Galindo's 1999 work El dolor en un pañuelo and 2005 work Perra, also deal with gender violence and femicide.[22]
New York City-based artist Coco Fuscó and hactivist artist Ricardo Domínguez collaborated on the performance piece Dolores from 10 to 10 (2002), which denounces the situation of women in the maquilas and the violence they face. In 2003, María Ezcurra unveiled the sculpture "Ni una más". That same year, the MujerArte AC (2002-2006) collective, led by Yan María Castro, convened the First Meeting on Feminicide through the Arts. In 2005, the collective La Ira del Silencio, led by Ana María Iturbe presented "Feminicidios, en el país de no pasa nada"[23]
In 2017, the Museo Memoria y Tolerancia in Mexico City presented the temporary exhibition "Feminicidio en México. Enough is enough! curated by Linda Atach and works by Teresa Margolles, Mayra Martell, Iván Castaneira, Cintia Bolio, Teresa Serrano and Elina Chauvet also made in the last decade.
Antimonumenta are art pieces erected at protests to demand justice for the victims of gender violence and femicides in different states of Mexico such as the CDMX, the State of Mexico, Jalisco, Quintana Roo and Chiapas.[24] [25] [26]
On October 28, 2017, the Los de Arriba supporters' club Los de Arriba displayed a hundred posters with the legend "Ni una menos" (Not one less), at the match played between León and Veracruz. In addition, a statement was published on social networks, denouncing violence against women.[27] [28]